Robotin Monica C, Masgoret Ximena, Porwal Mamta, Goldsbury David, Khoo Chee, George Jacob
School of Medicine, The University of Notre Dame Australia, Darlinghurst.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney, Camperdown.
Clin Epidemiol. 2017 Dec 21;10:41-49. doi: 10.2147/CLEP.S146275. eCollection 2018.
Approximately 1% of Australians have chronic hepatitis B (CHB), which disproportionately affects people born in hepatitis B-endemic countries. Currently, approximately half of the people affected remain undiagnosed and antiviral treatment uptake is suboptimal (~5%). This increases the likelihood of developing end-stage disease complications, particularly hepatocellular cancer (HCC), and largely accounts for the significant increases in HCC incidence and mortality in Australia over the last decades. As our previous economic modeling suggested that CHB screening and treatment is cost-effective, we tested the feasibility of a primary care-based model of CHB diagnosis and management to prevent HCC.
From 2009 to 2016, the B Positive program trialed a CHB screening and management program in an area of high disease prevalence in Sydney, Australia. Trained local primary care providers (general practitioners) screened and managed their CHB patients using a purpose-built CHB Registry and a risk stratification algorithm, which allocated patients to ongoing primary care-based management or specialist referral.
The program enrolled and followed up >1,500 people (25% of the target population). Their median age was 48 years, with most participants being born in China (50%) or Vietnam (32%). The risk stratification algorithm allocated most Registry participants (n=847 or 79%) to primary care-based management, reducing unnecessary specialist referrals. The level of antiviral treatment uptake in Registry patients was 18%, which was the optimal level in this population group.
This pilot program demonstrated that primary care-based hepatitis B diagnosis and management is acceptable to patients and their care providers and significantly increases compliance with treatment guidelines. This would suggest that scaling up access to hepatitis B treatment is achievable and can provide a means to operationalize a population-level approach to CHB management and liver cancer prevention.
约1%的澳大利亚人患有慢性乙型肝炎(CHB),这对出生在乙型肝炎流行国家的人群影响尤为严重。目前,约一半的感染者仍未被诊断出来,抗病毒治疗的接受率也不理想(约5%)。这增加了发生终末期疾病并发症的可能性,尤其是肝细胞癌(HCC),在很大程度上导致了澳大利亚过去几十年中HCC发病率和死亡率的显著上升。正如我们之前的经济模型所表明的,CHB筛查和治疗具有成本效益,我们测试了一种基于初级保健的CHB诊断和管理模式预防HCC的可行性。
2009年至2016年,“B阳性”项目在澳大利亚悉尼疾病高发地区试行CHB筛查和管理项目。经过培训的当地初级保健提供者(全科医生)使用专门构建的CHB登记册和风险分层算法对其CHB患者进行筛查和管理,该算法将患者分配到持续的基于初级保健的管理或专科转诊。
该项目招募并随访了1500多人(占目标人群的25%)。他们的中位年龄为48岁,大多数参与者出生在中国(50%)或越南(32%)。风险分层算法将大多数登记参与者(n = 847或79%)分配到基于初级保健的管理,减少了不必要的专科转诊。登记患者的抗病毒治疗接受率为18%,这是该人群组中的最佳水平。
该试点项目表明,基于初级保健的乙型肝炎诊断和管理为患者及其护理提供者所接受,并显著提高了对治疗指南的依从性。这表明扩大乙型肝炎治疗的可及性是可行的,并且可以提供一种方法来实施针对CHB管理和肝癌预防的人群水平方法。